Plants & Wildlife

A blue heron scouts for dinner. Photo courtesy Jamie Betts/Trust for Public Lands

Wildlife

What have you seen lately? If you identify a bird at Pleasure House Point that's not on our list (below) send an e-mail (with a picture if you have one) to HamptonRoads@cbf.org.

Given its location near the mouth of the Lynnhaven River and Chesapeake Bay, Pleasure House Point is alive with bird life. This 122 acre mix of beach, wetlands, marsh, old-growth maritime forest, and shallow-water habitat provides breeding, migrating, and wintering habitat important to the future of several species. This is one of the reasons CBF and its conservation partners are seeking to preserve this important natural area.

A mid-winter birding expedition led by Bill Portlock, CBF Senior Educator for the Bay, in January 2011 identified 28 species of birds. The complete list is provided below. Of those, four are red-list species on the Audubon Watchlist or are among Audubon's list of the "Top 20 Common Birds in Decline." Audubon WatchList identifies species in need of immediate conservation help amid growing loss of habitat, invasive species, and global warming.

The Hooded Merganser is a species that prefers secluded areas around wooded ponds, lakes, and streams. The major threat to these stunning birds is habitat loss, as they rely on cavities of large, mature trees for their nesting sites. One of North America's least numerous and most secretive ducks, they dive for their diet of insects, crustaceans, small fish, and vegetation.

The Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow is an unobtrusive little bird that can be found in three distinct, geographically separated habitats. One is the mature, undisturbed coastal marshes of the eastern seaboard. They can be found in the Chesapeake Bay region year-round. Their diet depends on insects and small crustaceans found in dense grasses, mudflats, tidal pools, and wrack lines. The Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow is threatened by an acute loss of breeding, migrating, and wintering habitat with the continued destruction of coastal marshes. Conservation of extensive salt marsh is critical to the species' future.

These little birds need large coastal marshlands—especially those around estuaries like the Chesapeake Bay—dominated by grasses for breeding and winter habitat. With a wider diet than Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow, it forages for small crabs, small mussels, immature insects, and the seeds of marsh plants such as cordgrass and saltbush. This bird has a limited range, which makes the loss of habitat even more of a concern. The Saltmarsh Sharp-tailed Sparrow is also affected by toxic environments and by invasive species, such as phragmites, which is unsuitable for nesting.

Snow Bunting(Plectrophenax nivalis) *Audubon Top 20 Common Birds in Decline

The southernmost range of the Snow Bunting reaches just below the Chesapeake Bay. These small birds winter along the shores of the Bay, lakes, and rivers where grass and grain fields are plentiful and the land is relatively open. Threatened by global warming in its northern home of the Alaskan and Canadian tundra, its southern habitat is threatened by the loss of open sites, like that at Pleasure House Point.

Common Plants of Pleasure House Point

When dredging began in the Lynnhaven Inlet in the late 1970s, a large amount of dredge spoil was placed on the Pleasure House Point property. The site was heavily manipulated to hold and drain the dredge spoil, and these changes affected the types of plants that grow on the site. Check our "Common Plant Guide for Pleasure House Point" for information about what's growing at Pleasure House Point today.

Bird Guide for Pleasure House Point

Use our "Bird Guide to Pleasure House Point" to help identify some of the many shorebirds, wading birds, waterfowl, gulls, terns, and raptors you may find while exploring the Pleasure House Point Natural Area.